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A Simple Battery. A battery uses two different materials (usually metals) for the anode and cathode, immersed in an electrolyte (usually an acid in solution). . e lectron flow.
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A Simple Battery A battery uses two different materials (usually metals) for the anode and cathode, immersed in an electrolyte (usually an acid in solution). electron flow 2. Some of the excess electrons run through the wire to the cathode to balance out the charge, producing an electric current. 3. The cathode collects the extra electrons. 4. Negative ions in the acid combine with positive ions from the anode to make neutral molecules. Positive Hydrogen ions combine with the electrons on the cathode and make Hydrogen gas. 1. A portion of the anode dissolves, putting positive ions into the electrolyte and leaving behind some electrons, thereby giving the anode a negative charge.
Voltage & Current A battery pushes electrons out one side and takes them in at the other, until it can’t push any more. The voltage describes how hard it can push (or how much energy the electron gets from the push). When we connect a wire to a battery, electrons flow around the circuit. The current describes how many electrons flow through the wire per second. (This depends on what the battery is connected to.)
Series and Parallel Parallel Put one battery next to the otherif you need to supply more electrons to go through the circuit. Twice the available current! Series Put one battery after the other. Each electron is pushed twice as hard and gets twice the energy. Twice the voltage!